One thing to add to the discussion about ethanol and water in the gas... with ethanol in there, you can get "phase separation". This is where the ethanol, heavier with water, falls to the bottom of the tank. The ethanol is the piece that gives the gas it's octane. So with PS, you end up with water-soaked ethanol at the bottom of the tank and regular fuel that is very low in octane above it.
Plus, the water that is now bound to the ethanol will NOT get burned by the engine since it's too large to go through the fuel/water separator. If there were no FWS, you'd end up with large water molecules that can cause damage. A proper fuel stabilizer can help mitigate this problem - but that's a whole 'nother discussion!
The fact is, condensation can and does happen. That's just plain physics - and the less air space in the tank, the less condensation. Whether it happens
enough to cause a problem is the real question. And, truth be told, there's just too many variables to say, definitively, whether there will be enough (or any) condensation to cause issues in a certain scenario.
"Best practice", is to go completely full or completely empty. But whether that's
needed, depends on all of those variables - and that's why we have opinions - which are all good
Salmon... I also didn't see any hostility in your statement.